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IMDbPro

Sissi emperatriz

Título original: Sissi - Die junge Kaiserin
  • 1956
  • 1h 47min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.6/10
7.7 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Romy Schneider and Karlheinz Böhm in Sissi emperatriz (1956)
Costume DramaDramaHistory

La segunda entrega de la trilogía sobre Isabel "Sissi" de Austria cuanta la vida de la casada de la joven emperatriz según intenta ajustarse a la vida en la corte y a suegra.La segunda entrega de la trilogía sobre Isabel "Sissi" de Austria cuanta la vida de la casada de la joven emperatriz según intenta ajustarse a la vida en la corte y a suegra.La segunda entrega de la trilogía sobre Isabel "Sissi" de Austria cuanta la vida de la casada de la joven emperatriz según intenta ajustarse a la vida en la corte y a suegra.

  • Dirección
    • Ernst Marischka
  • Guionista
    • Ernst Marischka
  • Elenco
    • Romy Schneider
    • Karlheinz Böhm
    • Magda Schneider
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.6/10
    7.7 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Ernst Marischka
    • Guionista
      • Ernst Marischka
    • Elenco
      • Romy Schneider
      • Karlheinz Böhm
      • Magda Schneider
    • 18Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 12Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 3 nominaciones en total

    Fotos77

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    Elenco principal22

    Editar
    Romy Schneider
    Romy Schneider
    • Sissi
    Karlheinz Böhm
    Karlheinz Böhm
    • Kaiser Franz Josef
    Magda Schneider
    Magda Schneider
    • Duchess Ludovika of Bavaria
    Gustav Knuth
    Gustav Knuth
    • Duke Max of Bavaria
    Vilma Degischer
    Vilma Degischer
    • Archduchess Sophie, Franz Josef's mother
    Walther Reyer
    Walther Reyer
    • Count Andrassy
    Senta Wengraf
    • Gräfin Bellegarde
    Josef Meinrad
    Josef Meinrad
    • Major Böckl
    Iván Petrovich
    Iván Petrovich
    • Dr. Max Falk
    Helene Lauterböck
    • Gräfin Esterhazy
    Erich Nikowitz
    • Erzherzog Franz-Karl
    Richard Eybner
    • Postmeister
    Hans Ziegler
    Hans Ziegler
    • Dr. Seeburger
    Franz Böheim
    Karl Fochler
    • Graf Grünne
    Max Brebeck
    Egon von Jordan
    Egon von Jordan
    • Prime Minister
    Hilde Wagener
    Hilde Wagener
    • Baronin Wulffen
    • Dirección
      • Ernst Marischka
    • Guionista
      • Ernst Marischka
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios18

    6.67.7K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8marcin_kukuczka

    Second part of Sissi with a profound message!!!

    Whenever I see this part, it seems to me that Ernst Marischka wanted to show Sissi as a gentle woman who is exposed to the hardship of royal life. In spite of the fact that the film is full of sweet images (like other parts) which may seem to some people "out of date", it has a certain message conveyed.

    In fact, this part's content is built upon two issues: politics and the family life in imperial palace. Sissi, as a young empress, has to get used to the lifestyle in the palace. She finds it difficult, especially due to the attitude of her mother in law, archduchess Sophie. The problems grow when Sissi gives birth to her daughter and the baby is taken from her. Sophie thinks that Sissi is too young to be a good mother. She has to choose: be an empress and forget about mother's feelings or escape from the golden cage...

    Another interesting fact about the movie is the political situation of Hungary. Sissi loves this nation and aims at uniting it with Austria. Obstacles, however, are huge. Nevertheless, she does not give in and, in the long run, her goals are achieved.

    I loved the scene when she thinks of leaving Vienna due to family problems, but the Hungarians are waiting for the meeting. She decides to take part in it. Here, Marischka shows the price she had to pay. The duty of an empress is more important than the family, the beloved baby and personal happiness. As her mother Ludovika says to her that she has a duty and has to be strong to fight her emotions.

    At the end, I must admit that I cried when Sissi becomes the queen of Hungary, swears to fulfill her duties and the Hungarian anthem is being sung (so much forbidden in the time when this nation was persecuted): "Isten, Aldd Meg A Magyart, Jo Kedvvel Boeseggel..." Sissi cries. This is the love for the nation. This is the right attitude of a queen. Sacrifice even her happiness for the sake of fulfilling her duties.

    I love this part of Sissi. It has much to say to our times, in which the feeling of duty and a good motherhood have been distorted and lost. Especially, young mothers should see it. Marischka shows the love of a mother to her child and the love of a queen or empress to her nation.

    WORTH WATCHING. CLASSIC!!!
    10dutchie-10

    Brilliant

    Loved it as a romantic teenager in Holland in 1956 - now I'm a senior in Australia and still love it. It brings back wonderful memories of my youth. Sure it is sweet and most probably not a completely true story, but who cares ? I'll see it anytime, it's a shame they don't make movies like this anymore.
    kekseksa

    affirmation of the culture of Mitteleuropa

    In an earlier review of the first Sissi film, I pointed out that the historical significance of this trilogy lies not so much in its account of the Austrian Empire before the First World War (this is totally fairy-tale history) but in its relevance to the post-war German world.

    Germans (particularly young Germans) were in a constant state of denial in the fifties and sixties. As late as the seventies I taught groups of West German students who would were not even willing to express an opinion about the possible future reunification of a still divided Germany and of course steered well away from any discussion of the unfortunate events of 1933-1945 - the "you know what" of the German world.

    Austria, spared by a sort of political conjuring trick from all implication in German nastiness, served as a wonderful alibi for the pan-German world and was the natural setting for a sumptuous epic (a film of the kind that Germany itself now avoided making).

    Romy Schneider and Karlheinz Böhm were the ideal representatives of the new generation, expressive at once of continuity and reborn innocence. Both had parents who were in fact closely implicated in the period no one talked about. Magda Schneider, who appears of course as her daughter's mother in the films, had been a neighbour and close friend of Hitler (she still lived in Bechtesgarten) and had also been, according to herself at any rate, his favourite actress. The conductor Karl Böhm had belonged to a quasi-Nazi cultural organisation (formed by the very racist Alfred Rosenberg)and had publicly and ostentatiously welcomed the annexation of his native Austria in 1938. Romy and Karlheinz of course had both been at boarding-school and were innocent of any such associations.

    The average German did not so much want a break with the past but to establish a line of continuity that made the past somehow OK (even the "you know what"). It might be mildly critical of those nasty Nazis (as in the highly popular film Die Trapp-Familie, which came out in the same year as this second Sissi film, but were not prepared, understandably enough, to accept the burden of collective guilt for the past. Even The Sound of Music, the gooey Hollywood musical based on the German 1956 film, was felt by German audiences (despite the edelweiss) to be too strongly critical of the unmentionable past.

    In the second Sissi film, there is the same pan-Germanic context as in the first (Bavarian beer and Bavaraian pigs' trottters, the Tyrol and edelweiss are not forgotten) but the historical events (the Hungarian unrest and Sissi's fondness for Hungary are accurate) allow an expansion of the pan-Germanic space, balm to the soul of a divided Germany, beyond the German-Austrian world portrayed in the first film to include Hungary, traditionally very strongly linked, culturally and politically, with the German world but in 1956 a Communist state under Russian tutelage. It is not too difficult to appreciate the importance of this in 1956, the year of the Hungarian rising against the Communist government and its suppression by Soviet troops. The link was widely commented upon in the contemporary press and 350 Hungarian refusgees weer invited to the film's première at the Mozart-Kino.

    In 1954 Leni Riefenstahl's Tiefland was released in Germany, controversial because it had been made during the war and had made use of concentration-camp inmates as gypsy extras. Faced by a hostile press campaign, Riefenstahl ttok refuge in Austria. Her tour there was, in her own words, "a roaring success". In this film Mariscka hired gypsy extras for the crowd-scenes in Hungary, a fact frequently emphasised in the publicity for the film.

    Today a reunited Germany sees itself once again as the centre of the culture of Mitteleuropa but, even in the days when such things weer not spoken of, that cultural imperium remained close to the heart of most Germans. As Germany increasingly flexes its muscles and begins to talk incessantly once again of rearmament, let us hope that the future of that Central European imperium proves closer to the fairy-tale world of this trilogy, where even the reactionary autocrat Franz Josef is displayed as a benevolent liberal, than to the darker reality of the "you know what".
    6boblipton

    Gemutlichkeit in Formal Settings

    This movie continues the tall tale begun in SISSI as the adorable Imperial lovebirds move into the Schonbrunn Palace and all is hunky-dory for a year. When their daughter is born, however, up pops the Evil Mother-in-Law Trope, as Archduchess Vilma Degischer moves the baby to her wing of the palace. Maternal love cannot bear this, so Sissy flees back to Bavaria.

    Will the Emperor follow? Will the Archduchess admit she's made a mistake? Will the Hungarians walk out on the Spanish Reception when they think they've been snubbed, threatening the Dual Monarchy?

    Given the rough relationship of actual history to this spun-sugar confectionery, the best one can hope for is an exercise for old people tired of devastation by two World Wars talking about how it was better back in the Good Old Days. That's what one gets here in spades, with beautiful actors in beautiful clothes in beautiful settings, gemutlichkeit family relationships and beer and ham hocks at formal dinners, because under it all, that's what people really like. As a follow-up to the earlier movie, it's fine, but breaks little fresh ground on its own.
    5PennyReviews

    Good Enough

    Princess Sissi pretty much follows the well known story of the Austrian monarch, with few unpredictable moments and some unwelcome comedy acts. But, overall, it isn't a bad movie and the settings were breathtaking.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      In real life, the coronation of Joseph and Elisabeth (Sissi) took place in the Castle of Buda in 1867. However, they couldn't shoot the scene in Buda when this movie was made because the castle was seriously damaged during WWII. Furthermore, there was a revolution in Hungary against the Soviet regime in 1956. This made it impossible to shoot the scene at its original location.
    • Errores
      During the ball scene with the Hungarians the "Emperor Waltz" by Johann Strauß Jr. is played. This waltz was released in 1889. The scene however takes place in 1854/5.
    • Citas

      Count Andrassy: Since the time of Maria Theresa the Hungarian nation has waited from generation to generation for a human being in this Imperial House. Someone to trust, someone worth living for, and someone worth dying for. We didn't come to see the Emperor of Austria today, but to see our future Queen!

    • Conexiones
      Edited into Forever My Love (1962)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Emperor Waltz
      Music by Johann Strauss

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    Preguntas Frecuentes15

    • How long is Sissi: The Young Empress?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 22 de septiembre de 1960 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Austria
    • Idiomas
      • Alemán
      • Húngaro
    • También se conoce como
      • Sissi: The Young Empress
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • St. Michael's Church, Viena, Austria(as Crownings church interiors)
    • Productora
      • Erma-Film
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 47 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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